Nebraska’s head coach discusses plan to run the quarterback

Nebraska will be installing a new offense for the 2023 season.

Nebraska will be installing a new offense for the 2023 season. The Huskers will also be breaking in a new quarterback in Georgia Tech transfer Jeff Sims.

The new QB has shown an ability to use his arm and legs to move the football. In 25 games, Sims ran for 1,152 yards with 11 touchdowns while averaging 4.2 yards per carry.

New head coach Matt Rhule has discussed his willingness to run his quarterback if the situation is right.

I think if you’re running for three yards to get tackled by seven people, I don’t know if that’s the right thing. If you can create explosive plays. If situationally, you can convert on third or fourth down. You can store touchdowns in the red zone. 

Nebraska, of course, has a long history of running quarterbacks. For several decades the Cornhuskers ran the option with great success.

Heisman Trophy winner Eric Crouch leads all Husker quarterbacks with 3,434 career rush yards. Quarterback Jammal Lord holds the single-season record for QBs with 1,412 yards in 2002.

Rhule also stated that he’s excited to see what Sims can bring to the offense.

I don’t want to rob them of what makes them great. For Jeff, that might just be dropping back to pass and then tucking it and then running… we’re going to try to turn those guys loose. We don’t want to be silly, just running up the middle and getting three or four yards ten times, but if we can make plays with them, we will. 

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Nebraska OC discusses the quarterback room

Nebraska’s offensive coordinator recently discussed the continued development of the quarterback position.

Nebraska’s offensive coordinator recently discussed the continued development of the quarterback position. Offensive coordinator and quarterback coach Marcus Satterfield made an appearance on Husker Sports Nightly on Monday night.

Satterfield was asked to talk about the quarterback room and the growth of the group since becoming offensive coordinator and quarterback coach. He says that the Husker coaching staff does things a little differently from other staffs across college football.

“How we do it is a little bit different than how a lot of people do it these days, and everybody in our room is excited to be a part of it and push forward and show what we can do here in the coming months.”

Satterfield also discussed each player in the room and what they bring to the Nebraska offense for the 2023 season.

Top three quarterback battles in the Big Ten

There are still a few teams with questions at quarterback in the Big Ten #GoBucks #B1G

There aren’t actually that many legitimate quarterback battles in the Big Ten this season as most teams are bringing back their starter from last season or bringing in a transfer that is going to be the obvious starter. However, there are two huge battles that will define the future of two Big Ten contenders and one underrated battle that we’ll get into.

One interesting team that has neither a returning starter nor an expected transfer starter is Penn State, but the Nittany Lions do not make this list because Drew Allar has an insane amount of hype around his game and the brief action we saw him in last season showed that there may have something special in him.

Let’s dive into the top three quarterback battles in the Big Ten.

Florida’s QB situation among biggest remaining questions in transfer portal

With Florida losing a ton of players to the portal and draft, ESPN thinks the Gators will be one of the more active teams during transfer season.

With the transfer portal officially open and players looking for new homes, the University of Florida is one of the most intriguing teams in college football’s “free agency,” according to ESPN.

The worldwide leader in sports asked its staff what the biggest remaining questions are during portal season, and Florida came up a few times. First, Florida is one of about two dozen teams vying for former Rhode Island offensive lineman [autotag]Ajani Cornelius[/autotag]. The Gators have to be an attractive landing spot for any lineman looking to prove himself in the Power Five considering the success [autotag]O’Cyrus Torrence[/autotag] had after following Billy Napier over from Louisiana. With two years of eligibility left, Cornelius and Florida might be a match made in heaven, but it will take some serious recruiting to make the pairing official.

The other big question asked by ESPN contributors regarding UF is which quarterback the Gators will target in the portal. Florida is pegged as the “SEC contender with the most work to do in the portal,” and a lot of that has to do with the departure of [autotag]Anthony Richardson[/autotag]. Florida is also losing over a dozen players to the portal itself, so it only makes sense that they predicted the Gators to be one of the more active teams in the portal.

The answer under center isn’t as simple as one might think, though. [autotag]Jack Miller III[/autotag] is in line for his first career start in the Las Vegas Bowl and that will almost certainly serve as an audition for next year. There’s also [autotag]Jaden Rashada[/autotag] who is coming in as a true freshman next year, but there’s always some fear in having a freshman as the lone backup. That means Florida needs to target a quarterback with starting potential but also one that allows those other two to compete for reps.

Enter [autotag]Jeff Sims[/autotag], Georgia Tech’s dual-threat quarterback who “flashed big-play ability and could benefit from a fresh start.” Craig Haubert posited the idea of Sims to the Gators, and it seems like a decent fit. Sims would have “tempered expectations compared to some other transfer quarterbacks,” and would likely allow a good battle at the position to take place over the spring and summer. Alex Scarborough agreed with Haubert that Sims would be a “great fit in Napier’s offense.”

It certainly sounds like adding Sims would provide the perfect stop-gap between Richardson and Rashada, and Florida’s future at the position is already bright with the commitment of five-star 2024 commit [autotag]DJ Lagway[/autotag].

There are a lot of moving pieces to consider when making any sort of transfer portal predictions, but it feels pretty safe to say that Florida will be one of the more active teams this season starting at the highest-profile position on the field.

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Potential transfer quarterbacks for Notre Dame and if they should pursue

Who do you like from this hypothetical list?

With the quarterback position in such a odd place for Notre Dame, it only makes sense to look around and see who else is out there. Recently, I complied a list of current QB’s in the transfer portal and if they would be a fit for the Irish.

Today, 247Sports Clint Brewster looked at hypothetical portal quarterbacks, so let’s do the same drill and see if they are fits for the Irish if they end up in the portal.

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Sims a ‘good challenge’ for Clemson’s defense out of the gate

Wesley Goodwin isn’t big on comparisons. Clemson’s first-year defensive coordinator just knows Georgia Tech’s quarterback is far from one-dimensional. “He’s got his own strengths,” Goodwin said of Jeff Sims. “He presents problems and challenges in …

Wesley Goodwin isn’t big on comparisons. Clemson’s first-year defensive coordinator just knows Georgia Tech’s quarterback is far from one-dimensional.

“He’s got his own strengths,” Goodwin said of Jeff Sims. “He presents problems and challenges in his own way.”

Clemson has seen its share of dual-threat quarterbacks in the ACC in recent years, including Louisville’s Malik Cunningham, Florida State’s Jordan Travis and Syracuse’s Garrett Shrader. Sims is in a similar mold, but when Clemson faces Tech on Monday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in both teams’ season opener, it’ll be a different look than what the Tigers saw just last season from Tech behind center.

That’s because Sims, who’s been the Yellow Jackets’ regular starter since his freshman season in 2020, was injured a season ago when Tech made the trip to Clemson, which pressed Jordan Yates into action. Yates, who’s since transferred to Sam Houston State, completed just more than 50% of his passes, threw an interception and often tried to scramble under duress from Clemson’s defensive front, though the 6-foot, 195-pounder rarely got far (21 yards on 15 carries) in the Tigers’ 14-8 win.

At 6-4 and 220 pounds, Sims is more of a prototypical passer that also has the long-strided speed to make things happen with his legs either on designed runs or broken plays. Sims completed 60.1% of his passes in the seven games he played a season ago – an increase of more than five percentage points from his completion rate as a freshman – and averaged more than 5 yards per carry last season. He has rushed for nearly 900 yards during his time at Tech.

“I think that’s what the game has come to nowadays, dual-threat quarterbacks that not only are running the ball but have a great placement on the ball and are very accurate,” Clemson defensive end K.J. Henry said. “And that’s what he brings to the game. One of the best in the country. Very fast. Very elusive. The second you think you have him, you probably don’t.

“He’s really good at having that ability to get out of the pocket and make a negative play a positive. So he’s definitely going to be a good challenge for us Week 1.”

Henry and other veteran members of Clemson’s defense have already seen Sims in action. Sims played against the Tigers two seasons ago, though he wasn’t much of a factor in any capacity. He completed just 6 of 13 passes for 81 yards and was held to minus-23 rushing yards, many of which were the result of sacks, in Clemson’s 73-7 rout that season.

But Sims has played in 11 games since then. He’s also got a new offensive coordinator in Chip Long, who’s also directed offenses at Memphis, Notre Dame and, most recently, Henry said he and his defensive teammates have studied tape of Long’s previous offenses as well as Tech’s spring game, but knowing exactly how Long might decide to use Sims’ skill set, he said, will be a feeling-out process.

That first game, you can get anything, so we’ve got to be prepared for it all,” Henry said. “But at the same time, football is still football. By halftime, we’ll kind of have a feel for who they are and who they really want to be that game. We’ll kind of fix some things and then go from there.”

Based on what he saw on tape from Sims during Tech’s spring game, Goodwin said he believes Sims has improved even more as a passer since last season, particularly with his ability to push the ball down the field. Being able to contain every aspect of Sims’ game this time around will require disciplined football from Goodwin’s unit.

“Have great eyes and great discipline in the rush lanes for those guys that are apt to pull the ball down and extend plays with their feet,” Goodwin said. “It’s a good challenge up front and a good challenge for my linebackers as well just playing disciplined, playing with good eyes, playing with good technique and balancing up the rush lanes.”

Photo credit: Dale Zanine/USA TODAY Sports

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Notre Dame at Georgia Tech: Third-Quarter Analysis

It took a quarter longer than it should have, but Notre Dame finally has Georgia Tech on the ropes.

It took a quarter longer than it should have, but Notre Dame finally has Georgia Tech on the ropes. Some quality play on both sides of the ball puts the Irish within striking distance of keeping their perfect record heading into Clemson. While the college football world was reacting to the news of Trevor Lawrence being out for that game, the Irish were building a 24-7 lead that last through the end of the third quarter.

The Yellow Jackets threatened to close the gap after a 39-yard completion from Jeff Sims to Jalen Camp put the ball on the Irish’s 22-yard line. That hope was snuffed out on the next play when Daelin Hayes IV strip-sacked Sims, and Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa recovered the ball. Though the subsequent drive was defined by the run once again, the big blow was Ian Book’s 31-yard completion to Javon McKinley that put the Irish in the red zone. Kyren Williams took the ball for the next two plays because that’s all he needed, scoring a touchdown from 4 yards out on the latter of those plays.

The Irish suffered a loss for this game and next week when Marist Liafau was disqualified was ejected for targeting. He will miss the first half of the Clemson game as a result. Jude Kelley badly missed a field goal for the Yellow Jackets on the same drive, so no harm was done, at least in the short-term.

Notre Dame at Georgia Tech: First-Quarter Analysis

Sometimes, you just gotta hold onto the ball in order to come out on top.

Sometimes, you just gotta hold onto the ball in order to come out on top. While it’s too early to determine if that will work for Notre Dame at this point, that certainly was case in the first quarter. How else to explain its 7-0 lead over Georgia Tech?

The Irish began the game with a possession that lasted 8:44 thanks to a nice mixture of runs and passes along with a few third-down conversions. It ended with an 8-yard touchdown pass from Ian Book to Joe Wilkins Jr. That’s the first score for Wilkins at Notre Dame. Book completed all seven of his pass attempts for 49 yards during the drive.

Despite having to wait longer than usual to see the field, the Irish’s defense did not miss a beat. It allowed Jahmyr Gibbs to pick up 5 yards on the ground on third-and-1, but took those yards right back when Gibbs was tackled behind the line after taking a pass from Jeff Sims. Soon after, the Yellow Jackets punted it away and then appeared to recover a fumble but a hands-to-the-face penalty. The Irish took advantage of their second life by getting close to the end zone again as the quarter ended.

Terry Wilson ‘is a really intelligent quarterback who happens to have the ability to run’

Terry Wilson is a really intelligent quarterback who happens to have the ability to run.

Terry Wilson is three games into his 2020 senior season at Kentucky.

The Wildcats’ quarterback will face Tennessee in Week 4 of a 10-game SEC-only schedule.

Wilson suffered a torn patellar tendon in his left knee last season and played in only four games.

During his first season at Kentucky in 2018, Wilson led the Wildcats to a 10-win campaign, the program’s best season since 1977.

Kentucky quarterback Terry Wilson against Tennessee. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)

His journey to Lexington came after one season at Garden City Community College. There, Wilson totaled 2,133 passing yards, 26 touchdowns, 518 rushing yards and five scores on the ground.

Wilson enrolled at Garden City after signing with Oregon out of high school to play for Mark Helfrich.

The current 6-foot-3, 202-pound Kentucky quarterback played for head coach Jeff Sims at Garden City. Sims is now head coach at Missouri Southern.

“Terry was a highly-recruited player out of high school,” Sims said on the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days.” “He is what people are looking for these days. He is not a dual-threat quarterback, what he is, he is a really intelligent quarterback who happens to have the ability to run also.”

The entire interview Sims discussing Wilson’s path to Kentucky can be listened to here or below.